Example sentences of "that [verb] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ John King always advocates playing football and that 's why I like to go to Tranmere , my local club , and see a team that plays football from the back ; it 's great to watch . |
2 | or Anchises that laid hold of her flanks of air |
3 | Moreover , Schell et al. ( 1989 ) point out that it is now possible to engineer plants , by introducing B. thuringiensis genes encoded for toxin production , that develop resistance to tobacco hornworm ( Manduca sexta ) and the large white butterfly ( Pieris brassicae ) . |
4 | The former is making quite a name for itself , as it works well under Windows and as its device driver can be set up as a ‘ printer device ’ within Windows , the output of almost any Windows application that produces output to a printer , can be ‘ diverted ’ and sent as a FAX . |
5 | The lexical analyser ( which includes morphological processing ) has been designed to accept input in the form of a character lattice ( see Appendix C ) , so this can work with any recogniser that produces output in this format . |
6 | The person selected will spend approximately eight weeks with the RSC 's news publications department in London , working with the team that produces Chemistry in Britain and Education in Chemistry . |
7 | It also exonerates the community from taking on some of these tasks — caring for the elderly , the chronically sick and the disabled , and it is this aspects of the emphasis on family responsibility that produces scepticism about the motivation of exponents of active citizenship : it is seen as a substitute for the state 's responsibility for the social element of the citizenship of entitlement . |
8 | Currently lending support to and ‘ cheer-leading ’ Bristol 's Massive Attack , Neneh believes that dance music in the Nineties is ‘ gon na to clear ’ , but her attitude to her own music is relaxed . |
9 | These will be the ones that scavenge energy from their particular surroundings most efficiently , and use it to repair and augment their own bodies , and to produce facsimiles of themselves . |
10 | Suffixes that influence stress in the stem |
11 | It was a letter about her daily life , her family , her children and grandchildren , ‘ a precious human exchange ’ delicately penned by someone whom he had never met , from a country that he had hardly heard of , ‘ that became part of my flesh … a symbiosis developing between the correspondent and the prisoner ’ . |
12 | A determination to rein in the president also lay behind the Case Act that became law in 1972 . |
13 | The plastic went off with a smack of solid air that stabbed pain into his ears and moved the container next to him . |
14 | It 's tough work staging the Battle of Edgehill , with an eye for authenticity and tough on the props that bring realism to a 350 year old battle . |
15 | Within the brain it is usually only 1 mm or less , but the cell bodies of the neurons that bring information to the brain from the skin lie close to the spinal cord , so in a whale or dinosaur the dendrites could be 10,000 mm long , and this also applies to the axons of the motor fibres , which carry commands from the spinal cord telling the muscles to contract . |
16 | A transaction that conveyed title to readily marketable staples by endorsement of the bill of lading or warehouse receipt to the commercial , and subsequently to the central banker was encouraged . |
17 | Bull that made love to a Volvo |
18 | Finally , he shouted to all dealers : " Ring all the clients that made money by coming into Helene of London on your advice . |
19 | But these were the things that made life worth living . |
20 | Some of them did n't read music or tablature and they just needed chord symbols and little expressions that made sense to them . |
21 | She wrote long letters home to Antonia in which she translated the other girls ' lives in terms that made sense to her . |
22 | God 's sovereignty was reaffirmed in a manner that made salvation by works untenable . |
23 | British films of this period that made use of ‘ race ’ issues in their narratives promoted ideas which assumed consistent and uniform practices and social expectations relating to the synergy of ‘ race ’ and sex . |
24 | It was not only waders that made use of the sand : green-backed herons , cattle egrets and a solitary grey heron were also busily feeding , and a distant party of little terns on a sand spit were probably the race called Saunders 's tern , judging by the amount of dark on the wing-tips when they flew off . |
25 | Greek tragedy , he impressed on his audience , had been a total art form , a Gesamtkunst ( Wagner 's slogan , although Wagner 's name was not mentioned ) , to suit an age of whole men:a poetic drama that made use of architecture ( the theatre ) , painting ( scenery and costume ) , song , dance and music ; a drama created amid " perfection and harmony " by " artistic man " , who , at least in the earlier part of the fifth century , the time of Aeschylus , was poet , composer , conductor , producer and actor in one ; a drama performed at the communal festival of Dionysus before an audience which brought to the theatre something of the instinctive , rapturous spirit from which , in the Dionysiac celebrations , tragedy had originated in the first place . |
26 | That is what Menter a Busnes , the unit that encourages enterprise among Welsh speakers , is doing . |
27 | This is the humour that does not heal , the sort that encourages hatred of outsiders . |
28 | No one outside of the wilder sects of the artificial intelligence fraternity would suggest that a device that translated morse into natural language characters on the screen of a computer was releasing the consciousness implicit in morse . |
29 | See that stuffed bag in his hand and that guilty look on his face ? |
30 | It is this evidence that led West to the cautious conclusion that ‘ it is reasonable to assume that in the nineteenth century education played some part in economic growth . ’ |